—
We made it. Mara felt warm tears of relief trickle down her cheeks. There sat the safehouse, barely more than a wood shack under the crown of an enormous oak.
But fear scorched away Maraâs tears of relief. Voices were coming from the dimly-lit shack.
The past two safehouses had been completely empty. Sheâd assumed she and Ian were some of the last Caders left; that only theyâd learned about both the houses and the oncoming Vaerin massacres in time.
Had she been wrong? Were these other survivors⌠or were they Vaerin, waiting in an abandoned house to spring their trap?
As her whole body ached and her throat burned, Mara wasnât sure which she dared hope.
She set Ian down in a bushâone of the few green ones left. The forest fires hadnât touched this area yet. No need to hush the boy; he knew what to do. He settled under the bushâs thin branches and remained still.
Then Mara crept toward the safehouse.
It had one single window on the side, which she avoided at all costs; no need for Vaerin to get a quick peek at a helpless Cader crouched just outside their house. Instead, she skirted the shack and made her way to the back wall, where she knelt and pressed her ear against the wood siding.
The voices inside were soft and they were many, but she could make out every few words.
ââall agreed⌠dangerous to stay here.â
âNo, weâre most certainly⌠could be morââ
ââcanât stay for the sake of a fewâŚâ
A manâs baritone voice interrupted them all: âEnough.â
That one word extinguished all the other voices.
A sigh. Then the baritone continued, âWe could spend all night arguing around this. We already know from Erikâs report that the fires are spreading. Saundraâs right; we canât risk everyone here for the sake of a few more who may or may not be out there.â
Someone started to protest, but the baritone voice cut them off, âBelieve me, Alan, no one wants to stay more than me.â He paused. âYouâre not the only one whoâs hoping their family escaped the executions.â
Caders. Relief flooded Maraâs chest. She relished the emotion as if it were a cool drink. Survivors.
She raced back to the bush, rummaging around to fish out Ian. Her hands were shaking as she grabbed the boy. And, hopefully, friends.
Behind her, she heard the shack door swing open; it slammed against the wooden wall. âDonât move!â shouted the baritone voice.
Mara whirled, Ian already in her arms.
âI said donât move!â the baritone voice repeated from the doorway of the shack. The voice still had no face; all she could see was his silhouette blocking the doorway, his body backlit by wan candlelight from the shack.
This time, Mara obeyed.
Four long-legged strides took the man to the bushes, where Mara stood frozen. The mysterious man was tall and slender, but any further details were impossible to make out in the night.
The man paused before stretching an unthreatening palm toward her. His voice became far more soft, understanding. Perhaps even a little embarrassed and relieved. âForgive us; we thought you were Vaerin.â Then he gestured to the shack. âThereâs not much room left, but please, join us. You must be exhausted.â
âIâve been running for twelve days,â she croaked wryly. She hardly recognized her hoarse, scratchy voice. âI guess âexhaustedâ is one way to put it.â
She thought she could see the man smile. He held out his hand again. âMy name is Monroe.â
Mara clasped his wrist, and he took hers; the customary greeting for Caders, but she wasnât about to put Ian down to do it. Not on her life. Although holding a five-year-old in one arm and clutching someoneâs wrist with the other was no easy task.
âMara,â she finally bit off.
âWelcome aboard, Mara,â Monroe said gently.
Sheâd been wrong to be so curt with him. I have no idea what heâs lost to get to this place.
But it was too late to apologize now. Monroe was already leading her into the shack; he ducked inside ahead of her. The whole place was only lit by a single pale candle, but it still took Maraâs eyes a few seconds to adjust to the new light.
âSheâs one of us,â Monroe reassured the shackâs inhabitants as her eyes finally took in the scene.
Twelve sets of hollow eyesâthirteen counting Monroeâstared back at her from faces across the spectrum of skin tones and facial features that the Caders were so well-known for: lily whites and olive golds and sunkissed tans and deep browns; broad or thin noses, wide eyes or almond-shaped, thin lips or luscious ones. Monroe himself had creamy light-brown skin, a shock of ebony curls, and a trimmed beard that framed his high cheekbones and tall, noble face.
âLooks like Alan was right to vote we wait,â muttered a woman with brown tresses who was sitting near the back of the room.
No one disputed it, but tension hung thick as wet leather. Some of those eyes felt like they were singeing Mara worse than the flames.
Mara felt her way along a wall until she collapsed in a heap, Ian in her lap. Shifting uncomfortably, she let the boy free; but Ian only cuddled closer and looped his arms around her neck.
Sheâd come to expect a similar scalding look from the few Vaerin travelers sheâd encountered. Sheâd even become used to those stares from her fellow Caders once theyâd seen her âchildâ or The Magus.
But to get those looks now, in the middle of a war? Yes, they were two more burdens, two more mouths to feed. But they were also two more survivors. Didnât that mean something when their people were being exterminated?
Not friends after all. Mara hugged Ian to her chest.
âEveryone,â Monroe began in a soft voice, âthis is Mara andâŚâ
If heâd been waiting to see if the boy wanted to introduce himself, he was disappointed. The little one miserably buried his face in Maraâs shoulder.
âAnd Ian,â Mara finished briskly. âWe came from Rhodan Village.â
âRhodan? They have a lot of powerful mages there, donât they?â an adolescent girl whispered, incredulous. âEspecially for a little town.â
âI heard that was one of the worst,â murmured a short man with sad, dark eyes.
Ian whimpered, and Mara clutched him tighter. âPlease,â she said quietly, but it may as well have been an order.
A warning.
And they all seemed to notice. Mara could almost feel the other Caders take a sharp breath at the tone of her voice, at the threatening knifeâs edge just barely hidden under her word.
âWe still have more to discuss,â Monroe cut in. The tension slackened at the sound of his voice, but not by much. Monroe glanced to Mara, gesturing around the room. âWe were just working out our plans for moving forward.â
He paused uncomfortably. Someone coughed near the back of the shack. Nobody deigned explanation.
So. It was up to her to take the bait. Mara cleared her sore throat. ââŚWhich is?â she asked, staring blankly at Monroe.
Monroe continued, but he hardly answered her question. âThe safehouses were set up in a southerly direction,â he began.
Mara struggled to withhold her irritation. That was useless information; The Magus had explained as much when heâd snatched her and Ian out of bed, whispering that they needed to run. Now. That the Vaerin invaders werenât showing mercy to the towns that surrendered to them. That they were gathering up any magic-users, licensed mages and untrained amateurs alike.
Tears crept into Maraâs eyes. She pretended they werenât there.
âThey were designed as a pathway of sorts,â Monroe continued, âa path to the border.â He rapped his knuckles on the shackâs only furniture: a small round table that held the lonely candle. âThe goal was to guide any survivors into the neighboring country of Torien.
âOnce we cross the border, weâll be refugees. The Torien government should provide us safety from the Vaerin.â
Safety. The Magusâs words rang like iron in her ears: âYou just have to make it to Torien. The borderâs two weeks from here if you take it slow,â heâd said as heâd pressed a kiss to her forehead.
Itâd all sounded so hopeful. So tempting. Up until this very point, sheâd thought that if they could just make it to the last few safehouses, if she could just get Ian away from the frontlines, theyâd be all right. Theyâd hunker down; theyâd hide; theyâd be safe.
But now that she was here, looking around the shack full of faces⌠Maraâs heart sank. So he sent us to our deaths, after all.
But The Magus hadnât known. How could he have known things would turn out like this?
âYour plan has one fatal flaw,â Mara murmured, nervously running her fingers through Ianâs downy hair.
Silence. No one disputed her. Maybe some of them already knew. Maybe theyâd already heard while on the run, like she had.
Either way, it had to be said.
With a sharp breath, Mara blurted out, âTorien issued a statement three days ago. Theyâve closed their borders. Theyâre not letting anyone in or out.
âTheyâve abandoned us.â
—
Want more? Check out the microfiction based on Ian’s perspective on the TaleHunt app @Rynfyre
Photo: Twisted Words by Jack Cain; originally posted on Unsplash.com.

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